Marion
Cotillard, Jodie Foster lead Cannes glamour in
red carpet return
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[July 07, 2021]
By Sarah White
CANNES, France
(Reuters) - Decked out in a shimmering silver
Chanel gown, Oscar-winning actress Marion
Cotillard helped kick off Cannes' comeback on
Tuesday as movie stars from far and wide
descended onto the red carpet for the French
cinema showcase. |
The world's biggest film
festival is marking its return after skipping
2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, in slightly
more subdued form, with fewer attendees and
parties over the 12-day whirlwind of film
premieres.
Stars were out in force on the French Riviera
for the opening ceremony, in a show of support
for an industry hammered by the pandemic after
theatres closed for months.
"It will be my first time in a cinema for 15
months," Brazilian filmmaker Kleber Mendonca
Filho, one of the jury members who will pick the
winner of the top Palme D'Or award, told a news
conference earlier on Tuesday.
Hollywood stars Jessica Chastain and Adam Driver
- who stars alongside Cotillard in musical
"Annette", the opening film - were among
celebrities who travelled to France for the
event, along with Spanish film director Pedro
Almodovar and British actress Helen Mirren.
In a pearl-coloured Givenchy shift dress, Jodie
Foster, who first came to Cannes as a
13-year-old when she starred in "Taxi Driver",
arrived to received a lifetime achievement
award.
Sean Penn and Wes Anderson will be among heavy
hitters vying for prizes in the main film
competition, one of several parallel events and
premieres taking place over the next fortnight.
They include outdoor screenings on the beach
along Cannes' famed Croisette walkway, where
tourists beginning their summer holidays in the
resort city will get a chance to catch a glimpse
of Hollywood royalty.
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The festival retains a very
French flavour, and will showcase the latest
outings by directors Francois Ozon and Jacques
Audiard as well as Catherine Corsini's "The
Divide", set in modern day France against the
backdrop of 'Yellow Vest' anti-government
demonstrations. Festival
director Thierry Fremaux on Monday stood by
strict French rules barring inclusion in the
movie competition for films promoted by
streaming platforms like Netflix unless they get
a run in cinema theatres first.
U.S. director Spike Lee, who wore a hot pink
suit for the opening ceremony, chimed into the
long-running Cannes versus Netflix debate,
supporting the platform on which he released "Da
5 Bloods" at the height of pandemic lockdowns
last year.
"Cinema and screening platforms can coexist at
one time," Lee told a news conference on
Tuesday. "There was a thinking once that TV was
going to kill cinema. This stuff is not new."
(Reporting by Sarah White; Editing by Richard
Chang)
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